Economists expect GDP to benefit from numerous tailwinds, including lower interest rates, AI spending, and hefty tax refunds.
We’re running this country right.” Politico's data also showed that Americans aren't buying his Trump's claim that tariffs ...
President Trump’s speech in Pennsylvania was meant to alleviate concerns about affordability. But he kept wandering off ...
Job opportunities didn’t shrink as expected in October, but hiring continued to stall and layoffs increased in a month when the US government was shut down and hundreds of thousands of federal workers ...
People feel like their dollars aren’t stretching as far as before, and the cost of living is rising beyond their means. There’s just one problem: That part is not true. Most Americans are getting ...
Donald Trump has hit dozens of US trading partners with new tariffs while formalising recent trade deals with others, including the UK and EU. Analysts at Yale Budget Lab estimate that, overall, the ...
The story of manufacturing in this country is often told through steel, energy or technology. However, one industry that ...
The world economy has proven surprisingly durable in the face of President Donald Trump’s trade wars, the Organization for ...
U.S. economic activity was little changed in recent weeks, though employment was weaker in about half of the Federal ...
While spending soared to almost $12 billion, per one estimate, the data shows a more complicated economic picture.
Over the next decade, the US economy will face two big challenges: higher interest rates and AI-generated disruption. Each invites the same solution: policies to keep rates below their market level.
America’s first merger wave began in the 1890s and forged giants in steel, oil and railroads. A second preceded the crash of 1929. Executives assembled conglomerates in the 1960s; private-equity firms ...